"This May Be Iran's First Misstep - And Proof Leverage Isn't Total"
Brent and WTI futures extended declines on Tuesday morning as momentum continued toward an end to the US-Iran conflict. The latest signs of de-escalation include a U.S. waiver allowing some crude and fuel sales from Iran, while Tehran said $12 billion in frozen funds had been released as part of ongoing talks with U.S. negotiators.
Both sides have signaled progress so far this week, further eroding the war premium in crude markets as traders begin to price in the flood of Iranian barrels hitting global markets, normalization of the Hormuz chokepoint, and a broader easing of geopolitical risk across the Persian Gulf.
Strait of Hormuz, this morning.
• 04:03 UTC: a cluster of commercial vessels holding convoy formation ahead of transit.
— Windward (@WindwardAI) June 23, 2026
• 06:45 UTC: the same vessels underway and crossing south of Larak. pic.twitter.com/F1Yj9e0l7Q
Brent fell to $77 a barrel after sliding 3.3% on Monday, while WTI traded around $73 a barrel.
On the Hormuz front, ship traffic continued to normalize as an increasing number of tankers and cargo ships broadcast their transponders on the critical waterway, signaling growing confidence among owners, traders, and insurers after last week's U.S.-Iran interim deal.
Maritime intelligence firm Windward posted part of a briefing on X early Tuesday, stating: "25 transits on June 22, including French- and Qatari-linked LNG carriers moving openly with AIS active. Iranian exports hit a two-month high of 6.79M barrels."
Continued:
Iran moved to re-close Hormuz on June 21. The market answered.
Windward Maritime AI™ recorded 25 transits on June 22, including French- and Qatari-linked LNG carriers moving openly with AIS active. Iranian exports hit a two-month high of 6.79M barrels.
Operators are testing… pic.twitter.com/ruFW3HpTxB
— Windward (@WindwardAI) June 23, 2026
Eurasia Group senior analyst Gregory Brew commented on Windward's report, indicating, "This may be Iran's first misstep—and proof that its leverage isn't total. Iran announced the strait was closed, but it didn't *close* the strait. Without the credible threat of force, Iran's sway over the waterway has limits."
This may be Iran's first misstep--and proof that its leverage isn't total.
Iran announced the strait was closed, but it didn't *close* the strait.
Without the credible threat of force, Iran's sway over the waterway has limits. https://t.co/ox3aiiMWoL
— Gregory Brew (@gbrew24) June 23, 2026
To note, Brew is Eurasia Group's Iran and energy analyst, and if his assumption is correct, Tehran's massive leverage tool over global energy markets by closing Hormuz may be eroding.

